Authors: Jeremy Scahill
As of this writing, Yemeni journalist Abdulelah Haider Shaye remains locked up in a prison in Sana'a, in part due to the intervention of the White House. He should be set free.
AC1, Abbottabad Compound 1
ACCMs, Alternative Compartmentalized Control Measures
AFOs, Advance Force Operations
AFRICOM, US Africa Command
AIAI, Al Itihaad al Islamiya
AMISOM, African Union Mission in Somalia
ANSF, Afghan National Security Forces
AOR, Area of Responsibility
AQAP, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
AQI, al Qaeda in Iraq
AQN ExOrd, Al Qaeda Network Execute Order
ASWJ, Ahlu Sunna Wal Jama
AUMF, Authorization for Use of Military Force
BIF, Battlefield Interrogation Facility
CAG, Combat Applications Group (also known as Delta Force)
CCR, Center for Constitutional Rights
CENTCOM, Central Command
CFR, Council on Foreign Relations
CID, Army Criminal Investigations Division
CINC, commander in chief
CJTF 180, Combined Joint Task Force 180
CJTF-HOA, Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa
COIN, counterinsurgency
CONOP, Concept of Operations
CSF, Central Security Forces
CSSW, Charitable Society for Social Welfare
CT, counterterrorism
CTC, Counterterrorism Center
CTTL, Continuous Clandestine Tagging Tracking and Locating
DDTC, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls
DEVGRU, Naval Warfare Development Group (also known as Seal Team 6)
DIA, Defense Intelligence Agency
DoD, Department of Defense
E.K.I.A., Enemy Killed in Action
EC, Electronic Communications
EOD, Explosive Ordnance Disposal
FOG, Field Operations Group
FOUO, For Official Use Only
GRS, Global Response Staff
GST, Greystone
GTMO, or Gitmo, Guantánamo Bay
GWOT, Global War on Terror (or Terrorism)
HIG, Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin
HUMINT, human intelligence
HVT, High Value Target
IC, Intelligence Community
ICG, International Crisis Group
ICRC, International Committee of the Red Cross
ICU, Islamic Courts Union
IDPs, Internally Displaced Persons
INS, Immigration and Naturalization Service
IONA, Islamic Organization of North America
ISAF, International Security Assistance Force
ISI, Inter-Services Intelligence
ISR, Intelligence, Surveillance Reconnaissance
IWGCA, Interagency Working Group for Covert Action
JAG, Judge Advocate General
JIMAS, Association to Revive the Way of the Messenger
JPEL, Joint Prioritized Effects List
JPRA, Joint Personnel Recovery Agency
JSOC, Joint Special Operations Command
JUWTF, Joint Unconventional Warfare Task Force
KIA, killed in action
LeT, Lashkar-e-Taiba
LIMDIS
, limited distribution
MLE, Military Liaison Elements
NBC, nuclear, biological, chemical
NGO, nongovernmental organization
NSA, National Security Agency
NSC, National Security Council
NSDD, National Security Decision Directive
NSPD, National Security Presidential Directive
NSS, National Security Service
OLC, Office of Legal Counsel
OSS, Office of Strategic Services
PAK, Pakistan
PET, Danish Intelligence Service
PETN, pentaerythritol tetranitrate
PNAC, Project for the New American Century
PSO, Political Security Organization
QRF, Quick Reaction Force
RAO, Regional Affairs Office
RPGs, rocket-propelled grenades
SAD, Special Activities Division of the CIA
SAP, Special Access Program
SAS, Special Air Service
SCUD, tactical ballistic missile
SEALs, Sea, Air, Land teams of the US Navy
SECDEF, or SecDef, or Secdef, secretary of defense
SELECT, an elite division of Blackwater
SERE, Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape
SMU, Special Mission Unit
SO/LIC, Special Operations/Low Intensity Conflict
SOC(FWD)-PAK, Special Operations Command-Forward Pakistan
SOC(FWD)-Yemen, Special Operations Command-Forward Yemen
SOCOM, Special Operations Command
SOF, Special Operations Forces
SOG, Studies and Observation Group
SOP, standard operating procedure
SSB, Strategic Support Branch
TADS, Terrorist Attack Disruption Strikes
TCCC, Tom Clancy Combat Concepts
TECS II, Treasury Enforcement Communications System
TF, Task Force
TFG, Transitional Federal Government
UAE, United Arab Emirates
USAID, US Agency for International Development
USG, US government
USSOCOM, US Special Operations Command
WFO, Washington Field Office
WMD, weapons of mass destruction
1
they gathered for a barbecue
:
Author interviews, Awlaki family members, January and August 2012. Details of the boy and the scene come from these interviews.
1
“You are a gentle boy”
:
Author interview, Saleha al Awlaki, September 2012.
3
10:10 a.m.
:
Joint Inquiry Briefing by Staff on US Government Counterterrorism Organizations (Before September 11, 2001) and on the Evolution of the Terrorist Threat and U.S. Response: 1986â2001, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, June 11, 2002.
All details of the briefing come from the transcript, unless otherwise noted.
3
loya jirga
:
Joe Havely, “The loya jirga: A Very Afghan Gathering,”
CNN.com
, June 11, 2002.
4
the attic, elevator, narrow staircase, counterespionage
:
“Tower Report Under Wraps in the Attic,”
New York Times,
February 27, 1989.
4
most experienced
:
Clarke describes his White House and counterterrorism credentials during the congressional briefing.
4
more covert action
: According to the 9/11 Commission Report, in 1998 Clarke “drew up what he called âPolitical-Military Plan Delenda,'” which laid out a plan to “immediately eliminate any significant threat to Americans” from the “Bin Ladin network.” The plan had diplomatic and financial components but also advocated “covert action to disrupt terrorist activities, but above all to capture Bin Ladin and his deputies and bring them to trial,” as well as “follow-on military action.” National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States (Philip Zelikow, Executive Director; Bonnie D. Jenkins, Counsel; Ernest R. May, Senior Advisor), The 9/11 Commission Report (New York: W. W. Norton, 2004), p. 120.
5
“splattering mud back on the Agency”
:
Joint Inquiry Briefing by Staff on US Government Counterterrorism Organizations (Before September 11, 2001) and on the Evolution of the Terrorist Threat and U.S. Response: 1986â2001, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, June 11, 2002
(testimony of Richard Clarke). All statements made by Richard Clarke come from the briefing, unless otherwise noted.
5
“political assassinations”
:
Executive Order No. 11905, Fed. Reg. 7703, 7733 (1976).
5
“engage in, or conspire to engage in, assassination”
:
Executive Order No. 12036, Fed. Reg. 3674, 3688, 3689 (1978).
5
Muammar el Qaddafi
:
Seymour M. Hersh, “Target Qaddafi,”
New York Times Magazine,
February 22, 1987.
5
Saddam Hussein's palaces
:
“The United States Navy in âDesert Shield'/'Desert Storm'; V: âThunder and Lightning'âThe War with Iraq,” May 15, 1991, accessed August 5, 2012,
www.history.navy.mil/wars/dstorm/ds5.htm
. “TLAMs were used against chemical and nuclear weapons facilities, surface-to-air missile sites, command and control centers and Saddam's presidential palace.”
5
Desert Fox
:
William M. Arkin, “The Difference Was in the Details,”
Washington Post,
January 17, 1999.
6
cruise missile attacks
:
James Bennet, “U.S. Cruise Missiles Strike Sudan and Afghan Targets Tied to Terrorist Network,”
New York Times,
August 21, 1998.
6
pharmaceutical factory
:
James Astill, “Strike One,”
Guardian,
October 1, 2001.
6
case-by-case basis
:
Clarke says, “[The administration and the Justice Department] did not want to throw out the ban on assassination in a way that threw the baby out with the bathwater.”
6
trigger was seldom pulled
:
As Clarke put it, “CIA would ask for an authority. They would rapidly get it. We would wait. Nothing would happen.”
6
“
were held to the most restricted form of notification
”:
Representative Pelosi is speaking during the joint briefing.
7
key players
:
“Statement of Principles,” Project for the New American Century, June 3, 1997. Elliott Abrams, Richard Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, and I. Lewis Libby were signatories to PNAC's letter.
7
“
decade of defense neglect
”:
“Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces, and Resources for a New Century,” Project for the New American Century, September 2000, p. 4.
7
“
provided a blueprint
”:
Ibid., Introduction, p. ii.
7
key authors
:
David Armstrong, “Dick Cheney's Song of America; Drafting a Plan for Global Dominance,”
Harper's,
October 2002.
7
“
potential competitors
”:
Patrick E. Tyler, “U.S. Strategy Plan Calls for Insuring No Rivals Develop,”
New York Times,
March 8, 1992.
8
more powerful forces, toned down
:
Jim Lobe, “Cold War âIntellectuals' Re-enlist for War on Iraq, Arabs,” Inter Press Service News Agency, November 17, 2001.
8
“
All must be easier to deploy
”:
Prepared address of George W. Bush, “A Period of Consequences,” The Citadel, Charleston, SC, September 23, 1999.
8
“
Ardent supporters
”:
Lobe, “Cold War âIntellectuals.'”
8
“
issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein
”:
“Rebuilding America's Defenses,” p. 14.
9
“
undo the Clinton signature
”:
Donald Rumsfeld, fax to National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, “Subject: International Criminal Court,” February 23, 2001,
http://rumsfeld.com/library
.
9
“â
the crazies are back'
”:
Transcript, “âThe Crazies Are Back': Bush Sr.'s Briefer Discusses How Wolfowitz and Allies Falsely Led the U.S. to War,”
Democracy Now!,
September 17, 2003.
9
Rumsfeld hired Cheney
:
Charlie Savage,
Takeover: The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy
(New York: Bay Back Books, 2008), p. 9.
9
Congress condemned
:
Ibid., pp. 25â26.
9
overrode an attempt
:
Richard L. Madden, “House and Senate Override Veto by Nixon on Curb of War Powers; Backers of Bill Win Three-Year Fight,”
New York Times,
November 7, 1973.
9
“
consult with Congress
”:
Joint Resolution Concerning the War Powers of Congress and the President, Pub. L. No. 93â148, Sec. 3â4(1973)
10
“
low point
”:
Bob Woodward, “Cheney Upholds Power of the Presidency; Vice President Praises Bush as Strong, Decisive Leader Who Has Helped Restore Office,”
Washington Post,
January 20, 2005.
10
domestic spying operations
:
Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, Final Report; Book III: Supplementary Detailed Staff Reports on Intelligence Activities and the Rights of Americans, Senate Rep. No. 94â755 (1976).
10
Salvador Allende
:
Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, Staff Report, Covert Action in Chile, 1963â1973 (1975).
10
stymied the probe
:
Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities (The Church Committee), United States Senate website, accessed October 5, 2012,
www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/investigations/ChurchCommittee.htm
.
10
compel the FBI, rebuffed
:
Adam Liptak, “Cheney's To-Do Lists, Then and Now,”
New York Times,
February 11, 2007.
10
congressional committees
:
Overview of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Responsibilities and Activities, SSCI website, accessed October 5, 2012,
www.intelligence.senate.gov/about.html
; “The CIA and Congress: The Creation of the HPSCI,” CIA website, accessed October 5, 2012,
www.cia.gov/news-information/featured-story-archive/2011-featured-story-archive/cia-and-congress-hpsci.html
.